(Blake Edwards, 1961) Edwards makes a sparkling, sophisticated comedy out of Truman Capote's slight novella. In Audrey Hepburn he has the living embodiment of the volatile and ever-so-chic Holly Golightly, flitting through Manhattan society. George Peppard is steady as the writer fascinated by this prototype of a 1960s liberated woman.

Thank You for Smoking

8pm, Sky Movies Premiere

(Jason Reitman, 2005) This satirical assault on the smoking lobby is lightweight in comparison with Michael Mann's The Insider, but nevertheless makes for a sly comedy with lots of good gags. Aaron Eckhart stars as heartless PR man Nick Naylor, who wheels and deals to get ciggies back on the cinema screen: cancer sticks aren't as bad as your parents tell you, he tells high-school kids, and hangs out discussing body counts with his chums in the booze and armaments industries.

Être et Avoir

10.30pm, BBC4

(Nicolas Philibert, 2002) On the face of it, this documentary about a single-class school in the Auvergne, and its teacher Georges Lopez, is a study in the blindingly ordinary, but in the hands of director Philibert it is a funny, moving and insightful, not only on the school, but on family life and the workings of a small rural community: beautiful and fascinating.